thawrecka: (Default)
Cher (TW) ([personal profile] thawrecka) wrote2026-04-20 04:09 pm

More Prince of Tennis posting

Now I've watched through the first season of Prince of Tennis II and the specials, which is completely uncharted territory because I haven't read any of the sequel manga. This training camp is so stupid (don't go to a mysterious training camp in the woods about which you know almost nothing and which has terrifying gates, kids), and I'm shocked and surprised to discover Echizen is a cool jacket guy?! Because that jacket sure is cool!

Atobe lightly smacking Hiyoshi on the butt with his racket - wow, I never found them shippy before, but suddenly... Though as a Tezuka/Atobe shipper I am also eating so well. As a fan I feel serviced. Look at their eyes sparkling at each other.

Kaidoh carrying Momo on his back up the mountain is also insanely shippy.

Everything about this mountain training camp is fucking stupid, but I've accepted this Prince of Tennis is about nonsense boys adventures and not about actual tennis, so I'm enjoying it. Shishido and Gakuto squabbling is so entertaining to me. I really enjoyed Inui and Yanagi's data doubles moment. The Shitenhoji dorks have grown on me. Even Sanada is growing on me, which I thought was impossible!

I'm never going to like the Rikkai characters the way Rikkai fans do 😂 but I'm invested in so many characters banding together to turn Kirihara into a functional human being. It's sort of fascinating how completely Rikkai fucked themselves up, now that they're in a context where they're interacting people from outside their toxic mess. Yukimura has to learn how to enjoy things, and Sanada basically hates himself, and Yanagi even feels guilty for what they all did to Kirihara.

It's amazing how after so many episodes of watching the losers camp be forced to climb mountains, get chased by eagles, and sleep rough, switching back to the winners camp seems so decadent and infuriating in comparison! They get catered food and nice baths!!! Atobe brought his own rose petals for a rose bath!!! Maddening!

It is cute watching Eiji and Ohtori be so sad and lost without their doubles partners, though.

Me when Atobe developed X-ray vision: Of course this would happen, I don't know why I expected otherwise.
chefxh: (hero)
chefxh ([personal profile] chefxh) wrote2026-04-20 07:44 am

more of the same nothing

My entries here are petering out as my life gets quieter. No more job to bitch about, less and less political commentary, and less interaction with others.

I thought I would write more in retirement, but I find I have less to say.
cahn: (Default)
cahn ([personal profile] cahn) wrote2026-04-19 09:32 pm

The Jewish War: First half of Book 6

Last week: Sieges are awful. Josephus tells us that Titus really totally felt bad about all the awfulness (even though he didn't stop them) and there is a theory that maybe by "us" he meant "Berenice." Titus had dancing boys?? (Josephus does not mention any, sadly.) Does Samuel the Lamanite in the Book of Mormon owe anything to Josephus speaking truth to the wicked? Unclear. Talmud on the Sages vs. the Zealots as an interesting correlated story to Josephus. Poppea's complexity including both an interest in (conversion to?) Judaism as well as being ruthless; comparison to Constantine's much better press.

This week: The temple is destroyed.

Next week: End of Book 6.
torachan: my glitch character (glitch)
Travis ([personal profile] torachan) wrote2026-04-19 09:25 pm
Entry tags:

Daily Happiness

1. Yesterday was Record Store Day (a day to support indie record shops where they have a lot of limited release albums for sale) and we went to Record Surplus when they opened at nine only to find that there was a huge line all the way down the block. The people working there were passing out order sheets so you could write down the things you were interested in (including backups if your top choices were sold out) and Carla filled hers out, but after waiting for about 45 minutes and seeing the line barely move, she decided to tap out and we just went home.

Today we went to see if they had anything left over that she wanted and found several albums on her wishlist, including one of her top most wanted. We probably could have gone back yesterday afternoon or evening to check again, too, as there were only a handful of people who joined the line after us, so after that initial rush you were probably able to just go in the store normally, but it worked out in the end.

2. Tonight Alex came over for her usual Sunday dinner and TV and we were able to give her all the souvenirs we'd collected for her, which turned out to be quite a lot as we'd just been picking up stuff here and there that we thought was something she'd like. We actually found several small items with Gaara from Naruto, her favorite character, just at random shops, when last year we'd had to really go deep into the anime shop areas to find anything Naruto. Maybe it's having a comeback?

3. We've decided to get back into bike riding and that we'd like to get ebikes. The area we live in has a lot of flat spaces, but then also some directions you can't go without a hill, often a steep and/or long one, and having the ebike to get back up the hill would be very helpful, especially for Carla, and (hopefully) make us more likely to actually get out and use the bikes.

I had hoped that there would be somewhere around here that buys used bikes, but there doesn't seem to be, so I'm cleaning the old bikes up to try and sell on Nextdoor or Craigslist or something. I don't think I'll get much for them now, but they cost enough that I'd rather not just put them out on the curb for free. I got mine dusted off and pumped up the tires and took it out for a couple mile ride today and it was so nice. I haven't really ridden my bike much since we got a car again and I wasn't using it for my daily work commute. I'm looking forward to more bike riding in my future, and I think I might even take the old one out a bit while waiting for a buyer.

4. Lately Gemma has been spending a lot of time with Chloe and Chloe has been very tolerant of her. We often see them together on Carla's bed, but the other day they were both out in the dining room by the window.

Wordsmith.org: Today's Word ([syndicated profile] wordsmithdaily_feed) wrote2026-04-20 12:01 am

swale

noun: A low tract of land, especially one that is moist or marshy; also, a shallow channel or depression.
kaffy_r: Still from Arakawa Under the Bridge (Arakawa afternoon)
kaffy_r ([personal profile] kaffy_r) wrote2026-04-19 09:25 pm
Entry tags:

Dept. of Memes

Music Meme, Day 27

A song that describes how you feel right now

Another tricky one, given that I can never be sure what I feel at any given moment. But I'll give it a try. Here's the song that had me dancing all day, and I think that's as good a way to describe how I have felt most of today. 

There are actually two versions of this; one of them being filmed in L.A. (or at least I think that's where it was filmed) and the other one being very Korean. I think I like both of them for different reasons, so here you go. 






And here is a link to yesterday's post which, in turn, can connect to some of my earlier posts. 


 
ecosophia: (Default)
John Michael Greer ([personal profile] ecosophia) wrote2026-04-19 10:07 pm

Magic Monday

Jung goes for bloodIt's midnight and so it's time to launch a new Magic Monday. Ask me anything about occultism, and with certain exceptions noted below, any question received by midnight Monday Eastern time will get an answer. Please note:  Any question or comment received after that point will not get an answer, and in fact will not be put through.  If you're in a hurry, or suspect you may be the 341,928th person to ask a question, please check out the very rough version 1.3 of The Magic Monday FAQ here

Also:
 I will not be putting through or answering any more questions about practicing magic around children. I've answered those in simple declarative sentences in the FAQ. If you read the FAQ and don't think your question has been answered, read it again. If that doesn't help, consider remedial reading classes; yes, it really is as simple and straightforward as the FAQ says.  And further:  I've decided that questions about getting goodies from spirits are also permanently off topic here. The point of occultism is to develop your own capacities, not to try to bully or wheedle other beings into doing things for you. I've discussed this in a post on my blog.

(The quote? I've finished the sequence of my published books; while I decide what I want to do next, I have some memes to share.)

Buy Me A Coffee

Ko-Fi

I've had several people ask about tipping me for answers here, and though I certainly don't require that I won't turn it down. You can use either of the links above to access my online tip jar; Buymeacoffee is good for small tips, Ko-Fi is better for larger ones. (I used to use PayPal but they developed an allergy to free speech, so I've developed an allergy to them.) If you're interested in political and economic astrology, or simply prefer to use a subscription service to support your favorite authors, you can find my Patreon page here and my SubscribeStar page here
 
Bookshop logoI've also had quite a few people over the years ask me where they should buy my books, and here's the answer. Bookshop.org is an alternative online bookstore that supports local bookstores and authors, which a certain gargantuan corporation doesn't, and I have a shop there, which you can check out here. Please consider patronizing it if you'd like to purchase any of my books online.

And don't forget to look up your Pangalactic New Age Soul Signature at CosmicOom.com.

With that said, have at it!

***This Magic Monday is now closed, and no further comments will be put through. See you next week!***
rinue: (Default)
rinue ([personal profile] rinue) wrote2026-04-19 10:39 pm

All the sweet, green icing flowing down

Today, I rewatched the music video for Sufjan Stevens' "Tonya Harding," which is footage of Tonya Harding in the 1991 World Figure Skating Championship. It's the first time I've seen it since the Olympics, and midway through, it hit me how similar it is to the skating of Olympic gold medal winner Alyssa Liu. The muscularity of their figures, the freedom of their movement - it overlaps in ways I don't have words for.

I wouldn't have been aware of Harding in 1991; I didn't (and don't) follow figure skating outside of the Olympics. But I remember in 1994 how much background chatter there was about how female skaters should be demure, balletic, princess-like, and tiny. I'd say the 90s generally were the most screechy body size decade I've lived through, which added to it, but that was separate. This was about what was aesthetically correct for skating.

It was very strange. You were supposed to be proud of Harding because she was on the American team and would run up the points with her very high scoring triple axel nobody else could do, but you needed to acknowledge that she was not the quarterback (she was I guess an offensive lineman?) and that maybe being able to do the triple axel was sort of cheating.

Watching Tanya skate in 1991 and seeing it match Liu in 2026 makes me feel some things. Things that blur into the gymnastics coaching scandal. It's been a bad year for rollbacks of women's rights and open misogyny (and I believe domestic violence homicides are up) but maybe in some pockets we finally broke through pervy old man patriarchy. Look at Alyssa Liu.
lauradi7dw: (saucony sneakers)
lauradi7dw ([personal profile] lauradi7dw) wrote2026-04-19 09:43 pm

the exercise plan

I ran/walked (in 1:30 to 0:30 intervals) in the Lexington 5 mile race yesterday, finishing in 58:54, faster than I expected. The conditions were good - in the 50s and overcast. I only ran the first two miles masked. I definitely got lungs full of pollen, I hope nothing else bad. I don't guess I could be ready to run Mount Wachusett in a month (the race is 10K, so 1.2 miles farther, and a mountain, not rolling hills). My plan is to get to that distance anyway, probably not much more. From home to the far end of the trail in the Minute Man (sic) NHP nearby is about that distance but then I would have to get back, so closer to half-marathon length to do the RT.
I have (most days) been rowing for ten minutes in the morning.
I (most days) do a minute and a half plank.
I plan (but usually don't follow through) to increase the duration of swinging around a 20+ pound dumbbell to get my strength up for playing the jing.
When I don't forget, I squeeze stress things (neither of them actual balls) to improve my grip, which is terrible.
Continue with tap and Tai Chi and ringing and using walking as transportation some.

The other running thing that I want to maintain but don't do focused practice on is getting from the Red line platform to the busway in about a minute. I did it today, thinking I was about to miss the bus, but the bus actually was ten minutes late, so I could have casually ridden up the escalators to get to street level and had time to spare. Or running to catch the outbound train at Charles/MGH, but that is more complicated because it requires good luck with the crosswalk light. Or running from train level to busway at Harvard. I think those are my main occasions for sprinting.
mecurtin: Icon of a globe with a check-mark (fandom_checkin)
mecurtin ([personal profile] mecurtin) wrote in [community profile] fandom_checkin2026-04-19 09:52 pm
Entry tags:

Daily Check-In

This is your check-in post for today. The poll will be open from midnight Universal or Zulu Time (8pm Eastern Time) on Sunday, April 19, to midnight on April 20 (8pm Eastern Time).

Poll #34498 Daily check-in poll
This poll is closed.
Open to: Access List, detailed results viewable to: Access List, participants: 23

How are you doing?

I am OK
13 (56.5%)

I am not OK, but don't need help right now
10 (43.5%)

I could use some help
0 (0.0%)

How many other humans live with you?

I am living single
11 (47.8%)

One other person
9 (39.1%)

More than one other person
3 (13.0%)



Please, talk about how things are going for you in the comments, ask for advice or help if you need it, or just discuss whatever you feel like.
lauradi7dw: leafless tree and gray sky (bare branches)
lauradi7dw ([personal profile] lauradi7dw) wrote2026-04-19 09:01 pm

This could have been predicted. This could have been prevented.

https://lexobserver.org/2026/04/18/deadly-police-shooting-in-lexington-saturday/

This was the second time in four years that a police officer shot dead someone doing threatening things with a knife in Lexington. The claim was that they tried twice to get the knife away. What did they try? In this case it was an officer from Wilmington, not Lexington, who killed him, but many of the neighboring police forces practice shooting at a firing range at the composting facility on Hartwell Ave. One can hear them from the bike path. I usually yell fuck guns or something similar. It's my impression that they are trained to shoot to kill, not to shoot a knife out of someone's hand, but still, they could have tried something like that. Or gone after him with a baseball bat. I don't know, anything might have been better than killing him. In 2020 I wrote to all my town meeting representatives* asking that they make a local law that the Lexington police not carry firearms. Of the 9 folks, one sent a reply about how hard a choice it would be. Another said that there are crimes in Lexington, so they had to carry guns. I responded that I had lived in Lexington for decades and could not think of a crime that had been deterred by armed police officers. The two murders that came to mind would not have been prevented (but one of them might not have been a murder if we had had better dispatchers at the time. The victim bled to death before anyone was sent. That at least resulted in a much better 911 system). None of the other reps responded at all.
Lexington legally doesn't allow gas-powered leaf blowers, but a number of the landscaping companies ignore that. The enforcement mechanism is supposed to be that a neighbor of the yard being illegally stunk up calls the police non-emergency number, and the police show up (no sirens or flashing lights, since it's not an emergency) and issue a ticket. I hate gas powered leaf blowers with a fiery passion, but would I call the police? Heck no.

* unlike some New England communities, we don't have town meetings that include the whole populace. Instead, we have a representative town meeting system, with folks voted in by precinct. There are standing committees and such. It works fairly well. We also have a select board, school board, and planning committee that get voted on separately.
hannah: (Breadmaking - fooish_icons)
hannah ([personal profile] hannah) wrote2026-04-19 08:00 pm

Busy our hands.

Thanks to neighbors moving out of their apartments, not only do I have enough laundry pods to last at least another six months, I've got more lentils than I know what to do with. No, really. There's six kinds of lentils in my apartment right now, not counting the dried chickpeas, unroasted peanuts, and dried red beans. It's going to be the summer of lentils. My strategy's going to be to work through the smaller amounts first before moving onto the larger ones - there's enough red lentils for one or two meals, but the green ones will keep me fed for weeks.

I'm checking the usual websites, looking through my cookbook shelf, thinking of how to make them interesting and palatable when I'll be eating so much of them. I figure that once I'm done with Rome, a dive through the rest of Steven Spielberg's movies should be good enough distraction to carry the lentils those last few days when I don't want to pay too much attention to what I'm having for lunch.

I've also got some quinoa and rice and black soybeans, if I want to shake things up somewhat. Farro, too, down in a bag somewhere.
nnozomi: (pic#16332211)
nnozomi ([personal profile] nnozomi) wrote in [community profile] guardian_learning2026-04-20 07:55 am

第五年第九十九天

部首
水 parts 24-29
温, warm; 港, harbor; 渴, thirsty; 游, to swim; 渺, tiny/vast (...); 湖, lake; 湾, bay; 湿, wet; 滋, to nourish; 源, origin; 溢, to overflow; 溪, creek; 溶, to melt; 溺, to drown; 满, full; 滩, beach; 滚, to roll/to fuck off; 滴, to drip
pinyin )
https://www.mdbg.net/chinese/dictionary?cdqrad=85

语法
3.22 如果...就~~~ if ... then ~~~
3.23 只有 X 才 Y; X is required to have Y
3.24 一X都(也)没有, not to have even one of something
https://www.digmandarin.com/hsk-3-grammar

词汇
棒, great/stick
保护, to protect; 保证, to guarantee; 环保, environmental protection
抱, to hug; 抱歉, sorry
背, back/to carry on the back; 背包, backpack
北部, north
倍, number of times
pinyin )
https://mandarinbean.com/new-hsk-4-word-list/

玩玩
Here's a post by sakana17, linked with kind permission, listing some especially well-known chengyu and classical poems, with ample visual illustration in the links. Also, since we had the 淼 character a little while back, have 李淼淼 singing 也值得 and to go along with that, Zhou Shen’s 也很值得.

我很忙还是很闲,自己也不太知道。樱花都散了,现在杜鹃花开着花。大家过得怎么样?
ranalore: (pure evil)
I did it all for the eyelashes ([personal profile] ranalore) wrote2026-04-19 04:14 pm
conuly: (Default)
conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote2026-04-21 09:29 pm

I saw a red-winged blackbird!

I didn't get a good look, seeing it as I did out a bus window, but did I have to? They're not that hard to identify.

************************


Read more... )
the cosmolinguist ([personal profile] cosmolinguist) wrote2026-04-19 09:59 pm

Great Bridgewater Night

Since the day that I had no brain juice, I feel like I've been improving slowly, but from a low bar.

I had to miss a social thing that D's girlfriend organized on Thursday night, and I didn't go to D&D (also at her house) this afternoon because I've had a stabby bad-nystagmus-day headache on and off all afternoon and didn't think anything so visuals-intensive would be good for me. Between this and no lift club yesterday, I've been feeling in need of more socializing. And I feel like I didn't make much of my weekend, last night aside.

Last night was amazing though. After a little bit of annoyance at the insufficiency of the transport information given between the Britain First rally (ugh) that afternoon and preparations for the marathon today, both of which were between my house and the Bridgewater Hall, I determined the train would be best and -- with a little bit of running at the last minute -- it went smoothly. Like I said, it was [personal profile] angelofthenorth's first visit to the Bridgewater Hall, and I was glad that she liked it as much as I hoped she would -- she already wants to go back in the next few days.

We had surprisingly great seats, considering that when I called up to get tickets and was asked where I want to sit, I said I didn;'t care and I just didn't want to pay a lot. I don't think I'd heard Duke Ellington's Harlem before, but just like all the Duke Ellington I had heard it was a delight -- highlights were watching the conductor Joshua Weilerstein bouncing and flailing around, almost as if he was dancing to the music himself. Miriam exclaimed to me afterwards about the harp matching the double-basses.

The second piece, Nikolai Kapustin's Piano Concerto No. 4 was introduced to us as "wacky jazz but with rock, soul and maybe even funk hiding behind the very bland name. From where we were sitting, I could admire the pano soloist Frank Dupree in his forest-green suit who always had his hans flying around the piano keyboard, but next to his grand piano was a drummer at a trap set who was arguably a second soloist for the piece. It was really extraordinary, a ton of fun. When they finished, the pianist said "Would you like to hear some more?" (much to the surprise of the conductor, M later told me! she did the best audio description) and the well-mannered audience cheered enthusiastically enough that he seemed genuinely surprised in his reply, "Wow!"

For this obviously the orchestra wasn't involved, just him and his drummer pal whose name I didn't catch. The other musicians on stage watched along with the rest of the audience as these two played Kapustin's Concert etude No. 1. It had a drum solo! During which Dupree "snuck" away from his piano to come up behind the drum kit, theatrically grab a couple of drum sticks, and play right along with the drummer in a call-and-response way that deserved the chuckles it got (including what sounded like some use of the music stands etc.), with him getting back to his piano stool and send his fingers flying across the keys.

And then after the interval the main event, Antonín Dvořák's Symphony No. 9 in E minor, ‘From the New World’ which the intro said some of those players might have played 100 times, or 50 times. He described it as helping them pay their mortgages. The audience was asked how many had seen it performed before, how many had listened to it... M was expecting us to be asked how many of us had played it, to which of course I'd have been so excited to raise my hand. I hadn't listened to it in about 20 years, but I knew almost all of the symphony, and when we got to my beloved last movement, I couldn't sit still in my seat. I played bassoon for that in a band that didn't have strings, so I heard familiar parts not just in the bassoon but cello and double bass. Neurons that haven't gotten to light up for 25 years got to glow.

We joined the crowds decanting ourselves into the shiny darkness and on to Oxford Road station, with about ten minutes before our train home. I was still so excited I couldn't sit down while we waited.

So I wish I'd made more of my weekend to fend off burnout and some challenging things ahead of me this week, but last night was better than I had any expectation it would be.

lb_lee: A happy little brain with a bandage on it, enclosed within a circle with the words LB Lee. (Default)
lb_lee ([personal profile] lb_lee) wrote in [community profile] pluralstories2026-04-19 04:36 pm

the Swap, by H. F. [Gerald] Heard (supernatural short story, 1944)

"Jones had been reading up on Sufi esoteric practices. One in particular had interested him. It was called 'How the rainbow which circles the spray of the Fountain of Light (The Nor) may, by heart-contact, be thrown to link with another such rainbow. ' There followed quite unmistakable instruction as to how this rainbow interchange was to be effected."

Blurb: Two academics, an anthropologist and a psychologist, experimentally swap bodies for a time. But in their distraction and getting used to each other's bodies, one forgets to mention he's diabetic...

Why is it worth your time?: It's a neat little body-swap story that does a great job of expressing the weirdness and discomfort of getting used to someone else's body! Give it a shot.

Plural/1+ Tags: abuse not mentioned, bodyhopping, possession

Content Warnings: contain spoilers; see comments.

Accessibility Notes: Widely anthologized, available on paper and on ebook, and archive.org has a copy of one of those anthologies, Bewitched Beings: Phantoms, Familiars and the Possessed in Stories from Two Centuries.

Misc. Notes (if any): Henry Fitzgerald "Gerald" Heard was an interesting guy, a gay mystic before that stuff was fashionable, and apparently a real bear to read the nonfiction of. "The Swap" is a straightforward read though!